different between lawcourt vs barrister
lawcourt
English
Noun
lawcourt (plural lawcourts)
- Alternative form of law court
Anagrams
- outcrawl
lawcourt From the web:
- what's law courts
- what does lawcourt mean
- what is law civil court
- what is courts of law
- what are the 4 types of courts
barrister
English
Etymology
From bar (a collective term for lawyers or the legal profession) and the suffix -ster.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?bæ?.?st.?(?)/
Noun
barrister (plural barristers)
- (chiefly Britain, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand) A lawyer with the right to speak and argue as an advocate in higher lawcourts.
Usage notes
Some legal systems apply a separation of the roles of barrister and solicitor, such that a barrister (only) may address the court on a client's behalf and a solicitor (only) may act as an attorney for clients. In particular, this separation occurs in the UK and in countries that use the UK system. It does not apply in the US or Canada. Some systems apply a separation of roles that does not match the barrister/solicitor split.
Translations
See also
- barristor
Further reading
- barrister on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Barristers in England and Wales on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
barrister From the web:
- what barristers do
- what barrister means
- what barristers do in court
- what barristers wear in court
- what barristers wear wigs
- what barrister solicitor
- what barrister mean in arabic
- what's barrister in irish
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- lawcourt vs barrister
- wadis vs rivers
- wadis vs wadies
- waris vs wadis
- wades vs wadis
- cadis vs wadis
- wadis vs wais
- wadis vs qadis
- wads vs wadis
- wadis vs walis
- canal vs cannel
- cannel vs fannel
- cancel vs cannel
- cantel vs cannel
- cannel vs canned
- canner vs cannel
- cannet vs cannel
- cannel vs pannel
- scripting vs copy
- transcription vs scripting